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PASCALL PRIZE FOR CRITICAL WRITING
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- 2000 Judges' Report
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- Robert Nelson
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- The unanimous decision of the judges
is to award the 2000 Pascall Prize for Critical Writing to Robert
Nelson. It is the first time since 1991 that an art critic has won the
award. Nelson has written weekly art reviews and features for The
Age, Melbourne, since 1994. He has also written criticism and
poetry for many art journals.
- In the world or art, reviews have a particularly significant place. Artists list
newspaper reviews on their CVs, for they are often the only public record
that an exhibition has been seen, noted and evaluated. Nelson never shrinks
from the hard tasks of aesthetic and cultural judgement, in the process
sometimes toppling a few sacred cows. Yet he also brings a larger
perspective to the task of criticism: a sense of the eternal dilemmas faced
by painters, sculptors and the like as they grapple with the tasks of
representing the world, translating emotions and risking a point-of-view.
Robert Nelson relates to the work of artists as a painter himself; he once
remarked in an interview: 'Painting is a big deal for me. A lot of what I
comment on relates to technique and a kind of speculation which is
studio-based. All the art history training in the world doesn't yield the
intuitions that a prolonged stint in the studio produces. This goes beyond
technique, of course, to the questions and dilemmas of what to do in every
respect.
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- An art historian and teacher at Monash
University in Melbourne, Nelson pursues in the mass media, from week to
week, a witty, learned, reader-friendly disquisition on his most
passionate obsessions: the depiction of the landscape or the human face;
art about or by children; the transmutation into images of the elusive
properties of eroticism, good and evil, or the ordinary and marvellous
everyday. The judges were impressed by the strength and quality of
Nelson's writing.
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- 'He has a real voice', one judge
commented, 'individual and engaged'. Like past Pascall Prize winners,
Robert Nelson draws us, too, into a joyous engagement with the ongoing
adventure of art, and a cultural conversation of wide-reaching
implications.
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- Judges 2000
- Gay Bilson
- Marion Halligan
- Adrian Martin
- Andrew Riemer
- Alan Saunders
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